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| <nettime> Dot.Comedy of Errors: E-Suckers Fleeced by Madison Avenue |
<http://www.observer.com/pages/financial.htm>
The Financial Observer
Dot.Comedy of Errors: E-Suckers Fleeced by Madison Avenue
by Gabriel Snyder
Internet companies, whatever their strengths, make lousy
mass-marketers.
Turn on the television these days, whether it's South Park or Monday
Night Football, and you face death by dot-com advertising. Each
commercial break is a barrage of indecipherable spots introducing
obscure Internet companies that provide indeterminable services.
There's Donald Trump with clay all over his suit, leering at some
woman's cleavage, and there's Norman Mailer reciting his theory of
reincarnation, a fat man in a tank top sticking magnets on his head, a
hand puppet singing "What goes up, must come down," the
no-longer-Bionic Man wheezing into a video store and a muscle-bound
trampolinist massaging his sugar-mommy's bunions.
What is being advertised in these spots? It is hard to tell-or at
least hard to remember. On that level they do not work. But their
message is loud and clear: the dot-coms are desperate and don't seem
to mind that they are getting fleeced by Madison Avenue and its old
friends in the old media.
"It's absolutely a wonderful time to be in advertising," said Tom
Bernardin, president of Bozell New York, giddy after the agency landed
the $80 million Datek Online account. "I've been in the business for
25 years, and I can't recall it ever being quite like this."
The great dot-com advertising rush-made up mostly of low-level
startups with, say, 50 employees and $30 million in venture capital-is
basically a quest for mindshare. The dot-coms need to fatten up their
financials in the fourth quarter or else they will vanish. Christmas
is coming, and with it a chance to show that they can actually attract
customers and sell things. If they fail to make a splash, only a few
will make it to the spring. It is an arms race, comprised of dozens of
tiny new republics.
The dot-coms are attempting to establish their brands in a field that
has become hopelessly crowded with aspiring Web sites. They are all
frantic to rise above the white noise created by their own frantic
attempts to rise above the white noise. The Internet allows for an
infinite number of aspirants, but the marketplace is made up of a
finite number of customers-and a finite number of ways to reach them.
So the dot-coms are turning to advertising agencies and brand
consultants in droves, pushing account billings to new highs.
According to Adweek, total account billings through October amounted
to a record $10.3 billion, of which dot-coms awarded $3 billion worth
of business. In the same period in 1998, total billings were $6.3
billion, of which Internet companies accounted for just $200 million.
The dot-coms are the new suckers, pouring dumb money into the coffers
of their putative rivals in the old media-radio, print, television,
outdoor. They don't have marketing strategy; they have cash. The
agencies and the media outlets are happy to oblige them.
"I have heard through the Internet grapevine that when radio sales
people hear dot-com attached to a company's name, they double the
price," said Jonathan Greenberg, chief executive of Gist
Communications, which puts television listings on the Web. Mr.
Greenberg doesn't plan to make any ad buys until after New Year's,
when his company will launch a $10 million on-line, outdoor, radio and
television campaign. "There is a feeding frenzy taking place among the
sellers of broadcast advertising. I'm glad that I am not in this
fourth quarter e-commerce rush, because if I was, we would have to pay
the dot-com premium. I don't want to buy $10 million worth of
advertising as a dot-com and get the same thing a non-dot-com would
get at $5 million."
"Oh, it's huge!" said Cleve Langton, director of business development
for DDB Worldwide. "It's like the agency business was 30 years ago.
The clients are saying, `Look, we don't have a marketing department.
We need you to be the brand steward. We need you to create the brand,
identify the positioning and build awareness and then drive traffic to
the site and maintain that.'"
And they're willing to spend whatever it takes. Mr. Langton said that
out of the $1 billion worth of new business DDB has won this year,
close to $200 million is dot-com accounts, around $150 million of that
coming in the third quarter alone. "The dot-com founder or the dot-com
marketing team will come to us and say, `We think we want to spend $15
million,'" Mr. Langton said. "And the venture capitalist will come
back and say, `You're being unrealistic, you need to double that
budget.' So when we actually write the plan, they're actually spending
$30 or $40 million because of the V.C.'s assessment."
"The dot-coms are kind of setting their own pricing," said Cindy
Clements, the head of local affiliate buying at TBWA-Chiat-Day North
America. "They're buying very last-minute, and they're paying very
high premiums. But they have the cash."
So now the smart money is forced to sit out. "It makes my work more
difficult placing time for my regular advertisers," Ms. Clements said.
"It's the tried-and-true advertisers that are being pre-empted or
being forced to pay higher rates just to hold their spot in place.
Some stations don't pre-empt, but some stations are obviously going to
take the business if they get double the rates for it."
But eventually the tried-and-true will find a way back in. The
dot-coms whose advertising fails to attract consumers will find they
don't have as much cash to play with.
"We think there is definitely going to be a shakeout at the end of the
fourth quarter," said Kozmo.com chief executive Joseph Park. "You're
going to see a lot of dot-com companies who have blown all their money
on advertising and didn't win in the fourth-quarter Christmas wars,
and they're going to be in financial trouble in the first half of next
year."
Bigger Balls
Lean and nimble, the Internet companies are unencumbered by
bureaucracy or concern for the bottom line. They don't have to spend
months crafting marketing campaigns or haggling with their own finance
departments over the allocation of advertising dollars. So they have
nothing to stop them from making rash decisions-like spending most of
their marketing budget on one 30-second Super Bowl ad.
"Typically when you work with a larger, more established brand, you're
working with a career advertising manager somewhere, and he's a
corporate guy," said Edward Boches, executive creative director for
Mullen, an advertising firm in Wenham, Mass., that created ads for
Monster.com, Cozone.com and Oxygen Media, among others. "Obviously, he
wants his work to be great, but he's also got to think about his
internal constituencies: What's the sales force gonna think? What's
his boss gonna think? So that person is almost forced to be a little
bit more cautious because he's trying to also keep his job and survive
and prosper inside a company.
"In these younger companies, more often than not ad agencies are
working with the top guy. They're working with the boss, the founder.
Those people are by definition entrepreneurs. And what does that mean?
They got bigger balls. They're more courageous. They're risk-takers.
And so they'll do more aggressive advertising."
Aggressive in advertising means expensive. It means booking the most
coveted time in television. Leslie Winthrop, managing partner of
agency search consultants AAR-Bob Wolf Partners, said people in
advertising have begun to refer to the Super Bowl as the Dot-Com Bowl.
"Who else wants to pay the Super Bowl prices?" she said.
Most well-established advertisers buy their fall ad space in the
"up-front market" the previous spring, when networks are willing to
sell at a discount. Last spring, some of the dot-coms that are
advertising now were just business plans in a venture capitalist's
briefcase. So the new dot-coms eager to ramp up for Christmas are
stuck buying in what's called the "scatter market." As a result, they
are paying a lot more than the AT&T Corporation or the Ford Motor
Corporation would have in the spring.
Thanks to the dot-coms, the networks are booked solid for November and
December. "The fourth quarter has essentially sold out," said Dana
McClintock, a spokesman for CBS Corporation. Nonetheless, if a dot-com
with fat pockets wants to get on bad enough, Mr. McClintock hinted
that they can still buy air time-for the right price. "If somebody
walks in and offers $20 million for a 30-second spot, will we do it?"
he said. "I mean, put yourself in the business person's shoes."
Interbrand Group, a consulting firm that helps companies find
themselves, is lining up dot-com clients left and right. John Grace,
Interbrand's executive director, said, "Ten years ago when I called on
a V.C. and asked what hot companies do you have and who can we help
position, they'd list out the companies, and then we'd list out our
fees, whether it was half a million or a million, to work and figure
out where the brand was. They'd laugh us out of the room. Now the
V.C.'s are the first in line asking how much can we spend with you to
help define our brand? The impact of that is that our fees have gone
through the ceiling."
Mr. Grace added, "We're actually developing brands for ideas that
don't technologically exist yet. Fifty percent of the people who come
to us tell us, `Quick! We gotta have a brand because we are going to
have an I.P.O. in six months.' Our answer is No, or, `Here's a really
high fee. If you want to pay it we'll do the best we can do.'" And a
lot of them pay up. "They can't afford not to," he said, "because
they've got to do the road show for Wall Street."
"I would say conservatively in New York and Chicago we are getting
eight calls a week from dot-coms, and we are turning down six of
them," said Mr. Langton of DDB. "Out of those six, four are really
qualified but for one reason or another they just don't fit our
criteria. We are now in a position to be able to turn down a lot of
the e-commerce business. We are approaching it much the way the V.C.'s
do, and we do a vitality analysis on all the accounts before we
consider taking them on. Due diligence. In a lot of cases, we are
requiring payment up front on all third-party costs. We're requiring
that we have guaranteed income, and we're also checking the business
plan and making sure that it's valid. We're even going back to the
V.C. funding and making sure that the V.C. is valid."
How to Call a Turkey
But no matter how discriminating they may be, the dot-coms keep
coming, one after another, cluttering the airwaves and bus billboards
with their inane appeals.
"An agency's got two jobs," said Sam Craig, professor of marketing at
New York University's Stern School of Business. "One is to come up
with great ads that sell products, and the other is to come up with
ads that make the client happy. They may be the same thing, but if you
look at the Internet environment and you have a lot of young
entrepreneurs, their taste in advertising is quite different. For some
of these, they may think they're cool. The other side of that, they
grab your attention but they may not say enough about the brand to get
you care about the brand."
"You have a lot of dot-com companies out there doing crazy antics just
to get people's attention," said Mr. Park, the kozmo.com chief, whose
most recent ad features Lee Majors, the Bionic Man, running errands.
"But at the end of the day, those crazy antics are all that people
remember. They don't remember what the company does."
But the Bionic Man?
"It's really about educating our customer but trying to keep their
attention," Mr. Park said. "So you're sucked in because it's Lee
Majors. People haven't seen Lee Majors or the Bionic Man in ages, but
people instantly recognize Lee Majors and as a result they're tuned in
and then watch the commercial, and it's pretty funny." Maybe the first
time. In a vacuum.
Even though flooz.com now runs an ad in which Whoopi Goldberg menaces
befuddled shoppers, Robert Levitan, Flooz.com's chief executive, is
quick to criticize similar ads for cozone.com, a site that provides
information about how to use computers. Cozone's ads, created by
Mullen, feature Donald Trump, Dr. Joyce Brothers and David Robinson
trying to craft pottery, call turkeys and make quilts.
"You just forget the company," said Mr. Levitan. "It's just about the
Donald and his women."
Mr. Boches, Mullen's executive creative director, said that in the
Cozone ads they were trying to show people metaphorically that it is
O.K. if they don't know how to use a computer. "We are giving people
permission to admit that they're not supposed to be good at
everything, even if they're
really, really good at something else. If Donald Trump, Mr. Master of
the Universe, can have flaws or have something he isn't good at, then
certainly you, Mr. Decorator setting up your small interior decorating
firm, there's no reason for you to be ashamed to not be an expert at
something other than decorating. It's asking consumers to do a little
bit of work, but I don't think it's too much work."
Indeed, a little work helps the customer engage with the product, Mr.
Boches said. "Consumers consume brands and they also consume products,
but I think people also decide to consume advertising. If you have any
kind of sensibility for popular culture, I bet you wouldn't buy stuff
or use stuff if it had offensive advertising, or had advertising that
didn't amuse you or that didn't make you feel as if I'm in on the joke
kind of thing."
But Mr. Boches acknowledged that being in on the joke was not enough.
The builders of these new brands don't have time for that. They need
the eyeballs now.
Mr. Boches said, "We broke an ad for Northern Light [a search engine]
and got an e-mail from the president of the company the next day
saying, `Hey, these many people hit our site or these many people
didn't hit our site.' For us, it's like, holy shit, the reaction is
there in 24 hours.
"With typical brand advertising-ads for Budweiser or ads for Nike or
even a car-you're not expected to buy the beer the next day. You're
expected to start to feel good about the brand so that the next time
you are purchasing something in that category maybe I have you at
least considering this brand. With dot-com advertising, we want you to
sign on to the damn site tonight, or tomorrow morning or the next day
at the latest, because we need you to do that because there is no
other option. Somehow I have to get you to remember a brand-new name
you've never heard of, in the midst of an environment where there's a
new one coming at you every 15 minutes."
It's a tall order, but one he is happy to take on, if the price is
right.
This column ran on page 29 in the 11/15/99 edition of The New York
Observer.
COPYRIGHT © 1999
THE NEW YORK OBSERVER
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